Abstract

Landslides triggered by rainfall are among the most frequent causes of natural disasters in mountainous terrains. However, landslide susceptibility assessments are often limited due to the scarcity of reliable observations. Due to this lack of data, especially in developing countries, remote sensing is used for landslide susceptibility analysis. This study presents the application of remote sensing data and a logistic regression model to assess landslide susceptibility in a basin on a remote terrain in the northern Colombian Andes, where a rainstorm on May 18th, 2015, triggered more than 40 landslides and an associated debris flow afterwards. The methodology applied is based on free access remote sensing tools, since the study area is considered a scarce-data zone. The results show that free remote sensing tools provide enough information to run a model as logistic regression and achieve a successful first approach to the landslide susceptibility map of complex terrains as the study area. This suggests that the proposed methodology could be implemented in several regions with similar characteristics based only on free access information.

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